Red Dot, a crowd-sourced app that alerted users to nearby immigration enforcement activity, was removed from Google Play for violating store policies. The app was also removed from Apple’s App Store as the debate about tools that collect and spread law enforcement reports in real time becomes more intense.
A Google spokeswoman said the removal is in line with Play policies that are intended to prevent apps from introducing a high risk of abuse and which demand robust moderation for services that rely on user-generated content. The company also said it had not heard from the Department of Justice about the app before acting. Apple had previously taken down an equivalent iOS-only app, ICEBlock, and reporting suggests that Red Dot has been delisted on the iOS App Store as well.

Red Dot’s site presented the service more as a safety feature than an ICE locator, saying it culled reports from credible sources and accepted anonymous submissions. Users could sign up for alerts when there was activity in their area.
Why Google Said Red Dot Went Too Far for Play Store
Google’s Play policies have stringent requirements for apps that rely on user-submitted reports: developers must provide robust moderation mechanisms, effective in-app reporting tools, constant removal of harmful content and the ability to thwart abuse at scale. Services that enable targeted harassment, doxxing, or real-world harm are high risk, even if positioned as safety tools.
Real-time, location-based police alerts have inherent moderation challenges as well. Anonymous tips can be inaccurate or malicious, and instantaneous amplification can leave both residents and officers at loose ends in foolish and volatile confrontation. The larger category has run into problems in the past: neighborhood and incident-reporting platforms have been criticized for false positives and profiling, while a high-profile safety app recently faced backlash for widely disseminating an unverified suspect alert that turned out to be wrong. These are the exact situations app store policies seek to prevent.
Google has stressed that enforcement is routine, and widespread. In its most recent app safety report, the company said it rejected millions of submissions that defied policies and banned apps that it considered unable to keep user data and content safe. In that context, products like Red Dot pull too many popular policy tripwires: user-driven incident reporting, potential misuse and geofenced alerts.
What The App Promised, And What It Wanted
Red Dot said it didn’t monitor agents but compiled information from publicly available reports, as well as submissions by users. That design still requires heavy-duty safeguards: verification flows to limit false reporting, clear provenance labels, rate limits to slow amplification, geofencing protections that prevent doorstep targeting and 24/7 moderation with quick takedown. App stores also want to see clear community guidelines, safety education and a strong ban on personal information.

It isn’t clear if Red Dot implemented enough of those systems. The company hasn’t publicly addressed requests for comment about the delistings or what changes may be necessary to get back in stores.
Apple’s Parallel Stance on Real-Time Alerting Apps
Apple has adopted a similarly cautious stance with real-time alerting tools related to public safety. Its App Store guidelines prohibit apps that could facilitate harm or harassment, and call for tough moderation of user-generated content. Coverage of the removals reveals Red Dot is gone on iOS as well, with Apple joining in the takedown of ICEBlock which demonstrates that both platforms are aligned when it comes to risk assessment of this category.
What It Means for Developers and Users of Safety Apps
For developers, the message is blunt: If an app is to aggregate sensitive, incident-level data and allow public submission, it has to be built on some part like a newsroom and a trust-and-safety operation in one — fact-checking, provenance tracking, identity and privacy protections. Anything less will find it difficult to meet the app store standards of this day and age.
For people looking to find information about safety, official sources and vetted local community channels are still the most reliable routes. Community alert apps can help bridge the gaps, but they also increase risks of misinformation, profiling and confrontation — problems that policy teams at both of the big app stores now consider nonnegotiable.
Middles said that as of press time, Red Dot is not on either platform. Whether it can come back will probably depend on showing that the moderation is rigorous, clear safeguards are in place to prevent misuse and strict controls exist over how sensitive reports of all kinds are gathered, verified and shared.
